Tagged Questions

With the relatively recent proliferation in the number and variety of genders that our contemporaries willingly proclaim themselves to be or belong to, a new intransitive sense of the verb identify, ...

In English possessive adjectives and reflexive pronouns are
I - My - Myself
You - Your - Yourself
He - His - Himself *
She - Her - Herself *
It - Its - Itself *
They (sing.) - Their - Themself *
We ...

Say, for some reason, it's preferable to avoid pronouns when referring to someone. With most forms of pronouns, it's easy to do so by substituting their name in. Consider:
She likes the bread of her ...

We use reflexive pronoun after some verbs like *avail ourself, acquitted himself, absented themselves * etc and some time we have to avoid from reflexive pronoun after some verbs like break, burst, ...

Why are reflexive pronouns not used in the following examples? The sentences numbered 1 are what people say, but the sentences numbered 2 are what I understand should be be used, as the subjects of ...

How do we use myself as the only subject of a sentence?
For example I once heard some people saying Myself am to be blamed. Is this grammatically correct? How is it different from I am to be blamed?
...

I am quitting a job. I wrote a letter of resignation and have come upon the following sentence:
"Moreover, I believe [name of restaurant] will be better suited to have an employee that is different ...

I don't know if it's part of my regional dialect, but around these parts we use the phrase "pull to" to mean 'close the door all the way.' It wasn't until last week that it struck me as odd. Pull the ...